George, that this was all that
it was necessary to know. But this is where he made his big mistake.
Up at Lukati ail sorts of things happened, as Commissioner Sanders knows,
to his cost. Once he visited the district and left it tranquil, and for
Carter, his deputy, whom he left behind, the natives built a most
beautiful hut, planting gardens about, all off their own bat.
One day, when Carter had just finished writing an enthusiastic report on
the industry of his people, and the whole-hearted way they were taking up
and supporting the new regime, the chief of the village, whom Carter had
facetiously named O’Leary (his born name was indeed Olari), came to him.
Carter at the moment was walking through the well-swept street of the
village with his hands in his coat pockets and his big white helmet
tipped on the back of his head because the sun was setting at his back.
“Father,” said the Chief Olari, “I have brought these people to see you.”
He indicated with a wave of his hand six strange warriors carrying their
shields and spears, who looked at him dispassionately.
Carter nodded.
“They desire,” said Olari, “to see the wonderful little black fetish that
my father carries in his pocket that they may tell their people of its
powers.”
“Tell your people,” said Carter good-humouredly, “that I have not got the
fetish with me–if they will come to my hut I will show them its
wonders.” Whereupon Olari lifted his spear and struck at Carter, and the
six warriors sprang forward together. Carter fought gamely, but he was
unarmed.
When Sanders heard the news of his subordinate’s death he did not faint
or fall into a fit of insane cursing. He was sitting on his broad
verandah at headquarters when the dusty messenger came. He rose with
pursed lips and frowning eyes, fingering the letter–this came from
Tollemache, inspector of police at Bokari–and paced the verandah.
“Poor chap, poor chap!” was all that he said.
He sent no message to Olari; he made no preparations for a punitive raid;
he went on signing documents, inspecting Houssas, attending dinner
parties, as though Carter had never lived or died. All these things the
spies of Olari reported, and the chief was thankful.
Lukati being two hundred miles from headquarters, through a savage and
mountainous country, an expedition was no light undertaking, and the
British Government, rich as it is, cannot afford to spend a hundred
thousand pounds to avenge the death of a subordinate official. Of this
fact Sanders was well aware, so he employed his time in collecting and
authenticating the names of Carter’s assassins.
When he had completed them he went a journey seventy miles into the bush
to the great witch-doctor Kelebi, whose name was known throughout the
coast country from Dakka to the Eastern borders of Togoland.
“Here are the names of men who have put shame upon me,” he said; “but
principally Olari, chief of the Lukati people.”
“I will put a spell upon Olari,” said the witch-doctor; “a very bad
spell, and upon these men. The charge will be six English pounds.”
Sanders paid the money, and ‘dashed’ two bottles of square-face and a
piece of proper cloth. Then he went back to headquarters.
One night through the village of Lukati ran a whisper, and the men
muttered the news with fearful shivers and backward glances.
“Olari, the chief, is cursed!” Olari heard the tidings from his women,
and came out of his hut into the moonlight, raving horribly.
The next day he sickened, and on the fifth day he was near to dead and
suffering terrible pains, as also were six men who helped in the slaying
of Carter. That they did not die was no fault of the witch-doctor, who
excused his failure on account of the great distance between himself and
his subjects.
As for Sanders, he was satisfied, saying that even the pains were cheap
at the price, and that it would give him great satisfaction to write
‘finis’ to Olari with his own hand.
A week after this, Abiboo, Sanders’ favourite servant, was taken ill.
There was no evidence of fever or disease, only the man began to fade as
it were.
Making inquiries, Sanders discovered that Abiboo had offended the
witch-doctor Kelebi, and that the doctor had sent him the death message.
Sanders took fifty Houssas into the bush and interviewed the
witch-doctor.
“I have reason,” he said, “for believing you to be a failure as a slayer
of men.”
“Master,” said Kelebi in extenuation, “my magic cannot cross mountains,
otherwise Olari and his friends would have died.”
“That is as it may be,” said Sanders. “I am now concerned with magic
nearer at hand, and I must tell you that the day after Abiboo dies I will
hang you.”
“Father,” said Kelebi emphatically, “under those circumstances Abiboo
shall live.” Sanders gave him a sovereign, and rode back to headquarters,
to find his servant on the high road to recovery.
I give you this fragment of Sanders’ history, because it will enable you
to grasp the peculiar environment in which Sanders spent the greater part
of his life, and because you will appreciate all the better the irony of
the situation created by the coming of the Hon. George Tackle.
Sanders was taking breakfast on the verandah of his house. From where he
sat he commanded across the flaming beauties of his garden a view of a
broad, rolling, oily sea, a golden blaze of light under the hot sun.
There was a steamer lying three miles out (only in five fathoms of water
at that), and Sanders, through his glasses, recognized her as the Elder
Dempster boat that brought the monthly mail. Since there were no letters
on his table, and the boat had been “in” for two hours, he gathered that
there was no mail for him, and was thankful, for he had outlived the
sentimental period of life when letters were pleasant possibilities.
Having no letters, he expected no callers, and the spectacle of the Hon.
George being carried in a hammock into his garden was astonishing.
The Hon. George carefully alighted, adjusted his white pith helmet,
smoothed the creases from his immaculate ducks, and mounted the steps
that led to the stoep.
“How do?” said the visitor. “My name is Tackle–George Tackle.” He
smiled, as though to say more was an insult to his hearer’s intelligence.
Sanders bowed, a little ceremoniously for him. He felt that his visitor
expected this.
“I’m out on a commission,” the Hon. George went on. “As you’ve doubtless
heard, my governor is the proprietor of the Courier and Echo, and so he
thought I’d better go out and see the thing for myself. I’ve no doubt the
whole thing is exaggerated–“
“Hold hard,” said Sanders, a light dawning on him. “I gather that you are
a sort of correspondent of a newspaper?”
“Exactly.”
“That you have come to inquire into–“
“Treatment of natives, and all that,” said the Hon. George easily.
“And what is wrong with the treatment of the native?” asked Sanders
sweetly.
The hon. gentleman made an indefinite gesture.
“You know–things in newspapers–missionaries,” he said rapidly, being
somewhat embarrassed by the realization that the man, if any, responsible
for the outrages was standing before him.
“I never read the newspapers,” said Sanders, “and–“
“Of course,” interrupted rhe Hon. George eagerly, “we can make it all
right as far as you are concerned.”
“Oh, thank you!” Sanders’ gratitude was a little overdone, but he held
out his hand. “Well, I wish you luck–let me know how you get on.”
The Hon. George Tackle was frankly nonplussed. “But excuse me,” he said,
“where–how–Hang it all, where am I to put up?”
“Here?”
“Yes–dash it, my kit is on shore! I thought–“
“You thought I’d put you up?”
“Well, I did think–“
“That I’d fall on your neck and welcome you?”
“Not exactly, but–“
“Well,” said Sanders, carefully folding his napkin, “I’m not so glad to
see you as all that.”
“I suppose not,” said the Hon. George, bridling.
“Because you’re a responsibility–I hate extra responsibility. You can
pitch your tent just wherever you like–but I cannot offer you the
hospitality you desire.”
“I shall report this matter to the Administrator,” said the Hon.
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